CI meteorites have bulk chemical compositions closely matching the solar photosphere (except volatiles) and thus are considered to represent the starting composition of the Solar System. The return of CI-like samples from asteroid (162173) Ryugu by Hayabusa2 has greatly bolstered studies of CI. However, both CI and the Ryugu samples are CI1, i.e., they were extensively altered by aqueous fluids on their parent bodies so the mineralogy, textures, and oxygen isotope compositions of their CI3 precursors have been obscured. Fortunately, they contain rare remnants of primordial minerals in the form of small anhydrous silicate and Ca-Al-rich grains, and detailed petrologic and isotopic studies of these grains have helped elucidate the nature of their precursors. Here, we continue our work on petrologic and isotopic studies of such phases in Ryugu particle C0137.